REVIEW · SIEM REAP
From Siem Reap: 02 Hours Quad Bike Tour in Countryside
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by SIEM REAP QUAD BIKE ADVENTURE · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Quad biking changes your Siem Reap morning. You get hands-on quad training plus sweeping paddy-field views, all while cruising past villages and monasteries; it feels like getting out of town on purpose. The one thing to watch: it’s a physical, dusty-and-bumpy kind of adventure, so closed shoes and a little patience help.
Pickup is smooth and the timing is flexible. Tours run at 08:00, 10:00, 13:00, and 16:00 (the 16:00 ride includes sunset), and you’ll be collected from your hotel about 30 minutes before departure. This is built for people who want countryside sights in a short window, not a slow museum day.
You ride with a local English-speaking guide who handles safety instructions and driving tips, and the company supplies the key protection gear. Depending on the season, you’ll also get a face mask for dry weather or a raincoat for wet days—small details that make a real difference when you’re out in motion.
In This Review
- Key things I’d prioritize before you book
- Hotel pickup, departure times, and the real meaning of a 2-hour ride
- Quad bike setup: Polaris Trailboss 330 or Kawasaki Bruteforce 300
- Beginner-friendly training that keeps you from feeling lost
- The countryside part: villages, rice paddy fields, and water buffalo moments
- A Buddhist monastery stop: seeing the region’s spiritual side respectfully
- The coconut break: a small pause that helps you enjoy the ride
- Riding back via a different route: why you’ll see more than you expect
- What the ride can feel like in sun versus storms
- Price and value: what $66 buys for 2 hours of guided off-road time
- Who should book this quad bike tour, and who should skip it
- Should you book the Siem Reap 2-hour quad bike tour?
- FAQ
- What is the duration of the quad bike tour from Siem Reap?
- How much does the tour cost per person?
- What time options are available, and is there a sunset departure?
- Do I need a driving license or prior driving experience?
- What does the tour include for equipment and safety?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- How does the cancellation work?
Key things I’d prioritize before you book

- Beginner training first: safety instructions plus a brief session for first-timers on the quad controls
- Two ride options: Polaris Trailboss 330 or Kawasaki Bruteforce 300 rentals, with helmet provided
- Countryside route that actually changes scenery: villages, rice paddy areas, and a Buddhist monastery stop
- Big visual payoff: clear sky views over paddy fields, plus a sunset slot on the 16:00 departure
- Season-ready gear: face mask in dry season and raincoat in rainy season
- No license needed: you do not need a driving license or prior driving experience
Hotel pickup, departure times, and the real meaning of a 2-hour ride

This tour works because it’s designed for a short attention span. You’re not spending half the day getting to an activity and half the day waiting around. Instead, you get picked up about 30 minutes before your set departure time, transported to the office, then guided out into the countryside for roughly 2 hours.
The departure options matter too. The morning and early afternoon starts (08:00, 10:00, 13:00) are ideal if you want clearer visibility over the rice paddies and more comfortable riding temperatures. If you’re chasing atmosphere, the 16:00 departure is your play—it includes sunset, which makes the paddy-field views feel more dramatic than plain daylight scenery.
One more practical point: this is an active outing, not a seated sightseeing loop. You’ll be driving for much of the time, so build in a little mental space for dust, bumps, and quick turns off village roads.
If you're still narrowing it down, here are other tours in Siem Reap we've reviewed.
Quad bike setup: Polaris Trailboss 330 or Kawasaki Bruteforce 300

Your ride is either a Polaris Trailboss 330 or a Kawasaki Bruteforce 300, both provided as rentals. That’s a nice detail because it signals you’ll be using a proper off-road-style machine, not a basic street-only setup.
You’ll also get a helmet before you go. In the dry season, you’re provided a face mask, which is more important than it sounds when you’re riding behind or near other bikes and the roads get dusty. In the rainy season, the provided raincoat helps you stay comfortable while tracks can get slick.
Also, don’t underestimate the value of a known machine. When you ride something meant for rough terrain, you can focus on the route and your control instead of constantly thinking about whether the bike can handle the ground.
Beginner-friendly training that keeps you from feeling lost

The best part for first-timers is that you’re not dropped onto a bike and told to figure it out. The guide provides safety instructions, driving tips, and a brief training session for beginners operating the quad bike.
In particular, riders have described doing a test ride after instructions on how the quad works. That small sequence makes a huge difference. You get your bearings—throttle control, braking, and how the quad behaves at low speed—before you head into the actual countryside roads.
You don’t need a driving license, and you don’t need prior driving experience. That lowers the intimidation factor a lot. Just come with the mindset that you’ll learn quickly and ride carefully. Quad biking rewards confidence, but it really rewards attention to the guide’s directions.
The countryside part: villages, rice paddy fields, and water buffalo moments
This is the core reason to do it. You’ll drive through rural villages and the surrounding countryside communities, including rice paddy fields and encounters with water buffaloes. If you like seeing everyday life beyond the main tourist strips, this is where you’ll feel it.
Expect scenery that changes as the route shifts—open fields under wide sky, narrow stretches near homes and farmland, and viewpoints where you can actually see how the landscape supports local agriculture. In dry, clear conditions, riders have described the paddy fields looking especially vivid.
And yes, animals are part of the experience. Water buffaloes are explicitly part of the tour, and on wetter days, riders have noted flooded tracks and the need to watch for cattle moving around fields. The practical advice here is simple: slow down when the guide signals, keep your eyes up, and don’t assume a clear path is empty just because it looks calm.
A Buddhist monastery stop: seeing the region’s spiritual side respectfully

One of the included stops is a Cambodian Buddhist monastery. This gives the tour more depth than a pure ride-and-zoom experience. You’re not just getting a thrill; you’re also stepping into a place that reflects how rural communities live and practice.
The exact time you spend there can vary with the flow of the ride, but you should expect a short visit as part of the overall circuit. Plan to dress in comfortable clothes you can move in, and be ready to act respectfully in a religious space—keep voices down and follow the guide’s cues.
This monastery stop also helps break up the ride. After time on the bike, it’s a good chance to slow your breathing, look around, and connect the countryside scenery to the people who live there.
The coconut break: a small pause that helps you enjoy the ride

You’ll get a break during the tour, with local fresh coconut or a cool drink. It’s a modest moment, but it’s genuinely useful. Two hours of quad riding can leave you thirsty and focused on what your bike is doing—having a scheduled drink stop keeps the experience from turning into a nonstop push.
If it’s warm out, the coconut or cool drink feels like a reset. If it’s rainy or muddy, it still helps you recover and re-gear your attention for the next segment back toward town.
This is also where you’ll see the contrast between riding excitement and rural daily routines. You’re sitting with a drink while the countryside keeps working around you.
Riding back via a different route: why you’ll see more than you expect

You return to Siem Reap via a different route. That matters more than you might think. If you go out and come back the same way, you relive the same turns and the same scenery twice. A different return route increases the chance you’ll catch new views, another angle on the fields, and a fresh slice of village life.
It also gives you more chances to practice riding smoothly. By the time you’re on the second half, you usually feel more comfortable with the bike’s pace and how to react to road conditions. That learning curve is part of the fun for many first-timers.
What the ride can feel like in sun versus storms

Two hours outdoors means you’ll feel the weather. On clear days, the ride can look like a movie—wide sky, open paddy fields, and a steady countryside flow. That clear visibility is one of the highlights for people who like photos and big horizons.
In wet conditions, the tone changes. Riders have described driving through thunderstorms and flooded tracks, and also avoiding Brahman cows that had moved out of flooded fields. That doesn’t mean it’s unsafe—it means you should ride with extra care when the road is wet and when animals are nearby.
Practical takeaway: wear closed shoes, keep your posture relaxed, and don’t overreach your comfort level early. The guide will set expectations, but your job is to keep things smooth and controlled.
Price and value: what $66 buys for 2 hours of guided off-road time

At $66 per person for a 2-hour tour, the value comes from what’s included, not just the ride itself. You’re paying for:
- Hotel pickup to get you to the activity without hassle
- A live English guide who handles safety and route navigation
- Quad bike rental (Polaris Trailboss 330 or Kawasaki Bruteforce 300)
- Helmet (and face mask or raincoat, depending on season)
- Structured training so beginners can actually drive
If you tried to piece together a similar experience on your own—transport, a suitable vehicle, gear, and a guide to manage safety and local route logic—you’d likely spend more time and money. Here, the package is set up to deliver a real countryside experience in a tight time window.
So I think $66 makes sense if your goal is active sightseeing with practical support. If your goal is quiet, slow pacing, you might find this too energetic for your style.
Who should book this quad bike tour, and who should skip it
This tour suits you if:
- You want countryside views near Siem Reap without committing a full day
- You’re okay with an active outing and want to drive, not just watch
- You’re a beginner and still want a structured start on the bike
It may not fit you if:
- You want mostly indoor, calm sightseeing
- You dislike bumpy rides, dust, or being outdoors in changing weather
- You’re looking for a long, drawn-out cultural tour rather than a short scenic circuit
Also, keep your expectations aligned with a guided ride format: you’ll get countryside driving, a monastery stop, and a snack/drink break. It’s not positioned as a deep-dive lecture or a multi-stop city day.
Should you book the Siem Reap 2-hour quad bike tour?
If you like the idea of mixing real rural scenery with easy beginner training, I’d say yes. The combination of hotel pickup, provided gear, and an English-speaking guide makes it feel doable even if you’ve never driven a quad before. The sunset option at 16:00 is a strong reason to pick this over a daytime-only ride, especially if paddy-field views are your thing.
Before you confirm, make sure you’re ready for the practical reality of outdoor riding: closed shoes, comfort-focused clothing, and a willingness to handle dust or rain with the gear provided. If you want adventure with structure and a countryside route you wouldn’t easily arrange on your own, this is a solid bet for your Siem Reap days.
FAQ
What is the duration of the quad bike tour from Siem Reap?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
How much does the tour cost per person?
The price is $66 per person.
What time options are available, and is there a sunset departure?
Departures run at 08:00 AM, 10:00 AM, 13:00 PM, and 04:00 PM. The 04:00 PM option includes sunset.
Do I need a driving license or prior driving experience?
No. You do not need a driving license, and prior driving experience is not required.
What does the tour include for equipment and safety?
You get safety instruction on how to operate the quad bike, a helmet, and a local guide. Face masks are provided during the dry season, and raincoats are provided during the rainy season.
Is hotel pickup included?
Yes. Pickup from your hotel is included, and they pick you up about 30 minutes before the tour start time.
How does the cancellation work?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.





















